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Oct 2016

I started drawing in Saudi Arabia in 1999 from a book on drawing with pencils for beginners. ( I had plenty of spare time then after work.)
I progressed through colored pencils, watercolor, pastels, and eventually oils (which didn't last long due to the odor.)
I also did some digital in 2008 and forward but none of it was formal training unless you count the ones online once a week.
Now I am beginning comics.
I consider myself self trained.
What is your training? It seems even the teens here are ahead of me.

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    Oct '16
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There are 54 replies with an estimated read time of 9 minutes.

Mostly self-taught. My brother got into drawing first, and I sorta started copying him. Now, a good years later, he's outta college and I'm just going into it, and we're where we are today. I got into drawing digitally, though, while he didn't.
So, yeah, I'd consider myself self-taught!

I'm self trained.
I used to watch some TV shows as a kid, which gave me some tips about creating stuff, but it was mostly about doing things with clay or put things together with cardboard/paper and glue (like self made Birthday cards), but almost nothing about drawing. My books were mostly about crafting and origami too.

That's really cool, I love hearing about those things which we started building our works from. I bet you'll never forget that book. You sound as though you work with traditional materials, are you bringing this in to your comic book work?

Personally I am self taught, as much as I have been drawing since I could hold a pen, the book which helped me was "How to draw comics the Marvel way".... so I like to think Jack Kirby had a hand in my tutoring smiley

I'm half and half. I've gone to schools - and I did Comics and Visual Storytelling in college - but the art schooling I've had has been pretty broad and not very deep. Like, experiment with different mediums, try lots of different things, but not a lot of focus. Also, nearly no lifedrawing at all.

90% of the lifedrawing I've done has been on my own initiative, during evening sessions where all you have to do is turn up with a sketchbook and a pencil and no one tells you how or what to do. And I've learned all of my digital art-skills on my own, by poking around and experimenting and looking things up.

... Mind you, "self-taught" is kind of a weird term, because googling tutorials on how to draw stuff or use software or tools is technically being taught by someone else. But anyway, no, not all of my art skills were acquired in classroom settings with a specific teacher.

Completely self-taught in the sense that nothing I learnt came from a school or other institution. I did choose Art as a subject in school, but I legitimately learnt nothing from them.

I guess if anything, I'm Youtube taught? :'D

My mother was an artist but she was always too afraid to pursue her career. I loved her work and would try and imitate it as well drawing other work that I liked. Eventually more and more people started telling me I was talented, it also allowed me to tell stories and express myself. Around the same time I started getting into Disney, Pixar, and Dreamworks as well as animation in general. I have never taken a formal class in drawing (excluding the standard school curriculum).

I went to art school in college, at SCAD! Though "School-trained" is a weird way to frame it, since it implies that's where I got my start -- I started drawing when I was a year and half old and never stopped, like most of the self-taught people here; devouring every how-to-draw book I could get my hands on and constantly experimenting and trying to learn new things.

At the same time, having really skilled professors critique my work and point me in a more effective direction was DEFINITELY a huge boon. I wouldn't say "oh, but I basically learned everything on my own" because, while it's true that I was already "good at art" when I got there, they were able to build off the skills I already had to teach me a lot and help me improve really quickly.

I think that's the main benefit of art school -- it speeds up your development. I don't think it gives you skills you couldn't get otherwise; art classes just force you to practice and push yourself and then critique that work with the insight of a professional. It might take some time to discover that same insight on your own, but it's completely doable!

Mmm school trained? I started as a self taught, but then I took some courses in drawing and painting in the nearest community centre and I study grahic design so I took one elective in ilustration, but I didn't learnt too much, and a basic course in general art, where they taught me about color theory and all that stuff that I forget sometimes.

I can say I have a school background as good as someone that went to a high school with a decent art program.

What helped me to be more decent in art , was the book You can draw in 30 days from, it took me a year almost lol... yeah I am a slow learner. That gave enough courage to try to study something in grahic design, but after the elective in illustration I realized that drawing can always be a hobby, lol.

And I also started all that after finishing college when I took my first job, just to releax, but I ended up liking it a little too much lol...

Self taught! I've been drawing since I was a little kid, and have just been making sloooowww improvement since then. I've taken some art classes in high school, but they mainly taught art history and a few specific techniques, so I learned most of drawing on my own from online tutorials and books.

I'm self-taught. Not very good at being instructed, which is probably why I'm so bad at a lot of stuff. Lmao!
I've been drawing forever, and while I did take a couple classes, they were either things I already did and knew, or I was too young to take them seriously. Started really getting into artsy stuff when I was 12, but I didn't start doing life studies and getting into the serious stuff till I was 15-16. Got a tablet and did some digital about 2008-2009, but it wasn't very enjoyable so I went back to traditional only stuff.

i'm half-and-half! i pretty much spent most of my grade school life just doing my own thing, but then i went to SCAD and majored in comics and i really feel like their sequential art program really helped refine my techniques in comic making.

I went to art school (University of the Arts) for illustration. I found it to be a really valuable experience. Like others have said, that's not where I started drawing. I definitely went into art school already knowing how to draw, but the classes helped me improve. More than that though, I think just being in that environment (surrounded by other artists and professionals) helped me when it came to thinking about art as a career.

Self taught all the way baby! Only thing school ever taught me was how to take a test.

I guess mostly self taught?
I do go to uni for graphic design however that helps me in a limited way with my regular art and comic. I can take away some stuff from it, what I found most helpful with my comic was my typography class (learned about good/bad fonts to use and I ended up changing my comic title) but for the most part I'm self taught.

Self taught here. I just like to draw. It's only recently that I've considered making it into more than a hobby, but I'm clueless about where to begin.

Half and half really.
I didn't take an art class until high school (even then it was mostly do whatever the eff you want after shading some blocks and cones). But I did take photography in highschool and that's where I learnt the basics of photoshop which I am grateful for. Then in college I actually decided to major in graphic design, so I learned more technical things, and I also took painting and life drawing. Life drawing was suuuuper useful, that's probably the one class I'd tell anyone who wants to draw any sort of character to take.

As far as comic-making goes, I was never taught a thing for it.

I fully agree with this. Receiving critiques =/= "self teaching," either.

I think a better set of terms would be formally educated VS non. But even that's weird, because

So yeah...

This entire distinction makes me rather uncomfortable. XD; It's not like those who went to art school didn't have to work their butts off to learn what they learned.

Like most I am both I guess. When I started drawing I just sat down and... well, drew. I didn't have internet back then (way to age myself) and while I had some books I didn't understand how to use them to my advantage. So I just drew and eventually got better.

In my later life I made sure to take a few art classes here and there, but to be honest, I am not good at learning in that environment. Nothing beats just sitting down and practicing things you are bad at by doing things you enjoy (like making a comic). Analyzing other people's work is also helpful.

In the end it doesn't really matter. Every artist has to put in a huge chunk of their life to improve their skill. A teacher can not take that away, they might just give you some helpful pointers along the way. A great teacher does not make you a good illustrator by default. It's all on you.